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    An Investigation of the Conditional Practical Predictability of the 31 May 2013 Heavy-Rain-Producing Mesoscale Convective System

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    Date
    2018-08-01
    Author
    Kuroski, Aidan
    Department
    Atmospheric Science
    Advisor(s)
    Clark Evans
    Metadata
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    Abstract
    On 31 May 2013, strong thunderstorms initiated in west-central Oklahoma with one of the storms eventually creating a very strong tornado near El Reno, OK. The storms then grew upscale into a quasi-stationary mesoscale convective system that produced prolonged heavy rainfall that led to severe flooding across parts of Oklahoma, including the Oklahoma City metropolitan area. A 50-member ensemble of short range (0-24 h) forecasts was conducting using a set of initial conditions generated via cycled data assimilation to quantify event predictability and identify forecast sensitivities, primarily with CI and initial upscale growth. Both a composite and ensemble sensitivity analysis were performed using fractions skill score (FSS) as the partitioning forecast metric to measure these dependencies. Both analyses indicate that better forecasts are associated with an upper-level trough further to the west, stronger upper-level ridging to the east, stronger low-level convergence across much of Oklahoma, and a further west dryline and quasi-stationary front across northwest Oklahoma and Kansas. These conditions were associated with better early-stage MCS forecasts, which appears to be associated with better CI forecasts. These findings suggest that even slight differences in conditions leading to CI had large sensitivities in CI and the subsequent upscale growth.
    Subject
    CI
    ESA
    FSS
    initiation
    MCS
    sensitivity
    Permanent Link
    http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/91731
    Type
    thesis
    Part of
    • UW Milwaukee Electronic Theses and Dissertations

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